Corgi launches document tool Dataroom

Corgi has launched Dataroom, a document platform that combines secure file sharing, e-signatures, virtual data rooms, and document analytics in a single workspace.

The platform was originally developed to support Corgi’s internal insurance operations, where teams were using multiple tools to share documents, manage data rooms, and track engagement. According to the company, Dataroom provides a single platform for sharing files, collecting signatures, creating virtual data rooms, and monitoring how recipients interact with documents.

“Insurance runs on documents. Every policy, certificate, agreement, and renewal depends on documents moving quickly between people. We found ourselves juggling separate platforms for sharing files, managing data rooms, and tracking engagement. We built Dataroom to bring all of that into one place.” – Corgi.

Founded in 2024, Corgi has raised $374.5 million in total, including $374 million in 2026 alone, and is reportedly valued at $2.6 billion.

According to Similarweb, Corgi’s site (corgi.insure) pulled 116,640 visits in May 2026, up 142% month-over-month, with traffic skewing US (42%) and arriving mainly via organic search and YC/startups.gallery referrals — small numbers in absolute terms, but a steep ramp consistent with the funding and press run.

Bottom Line: Corgi sells itself as an AI-native insurance carrier. In eighteen months, it has launched an RRG, opened a 24-hour coffee shop, unveiled a document SaaS platform, dabbled in asset management, and is reportedly eyeing trucking. Clearly, Corgi is running on something stronger than coffee.